For Immediate Release: June 1, 2006
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
LEGISLATURE TO PROBE TOXIC COLLAPSE IN NEW JERSEY — Series of Cleanup Fiascoes Have Communities Feeling Betrayed and Vulnerable
Trenton — A series of highly publicized lapses in the Department of Environmental Protection oversight of toxic waste cleanups in New Jersey underscores the need to immediately strengthen the law, according to testimony delivered today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) before a joint session of the Assembly Judiciary and Environment Committees.
Today’s hearing will investigate the most recent embarrassment in which toxic PCB-laden demolition waste and contaminated soils from the cleanup of the closed Ford manufacturing site in Edison wound up at least eleven residential construction sites throughout central New Jersey. Legislators pledged to explore ways to prevent similar episodes from recurring, even as criminal probes get underway in the Ford case.
“With good reason, communities are losing confidence in the state’s ability to protect public health and the environment,” stated New Jersey PEER Director Bill Wolfe. “New Jersey’s cleanup laws have been weakened to promote development, shutting the public out of the process and leaving residents feeling that the government protects polluters and developers, instead of their communities.”
In the 1990’s, state cleanup laws were relaxed to reduce cleanup costs, scale back Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) oversight, and privatize and expedite cleanup decisions, allegedly as incentives to spur brownfields redevelopment. Over the last year, DEP’s cleanup program has come under increasing fire across the state:
To address these flaws, PEER is calling upon the Legislature to amend statutes in order to:
“We are simply recommending that the Legislature put teeth back into a law that was de-fanged,” Wolfe added. “It is time to restore public confidence in DEP, strengthen our cleanup laws, and send a clear message that government is on the right side.”
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Read the New Jersey PEER testimony
Look at the PEER request for legislative intervention
View the letter defining the scope of the Assembly Judiciary and Environment joint hearing
See the specific PEER legislative recommendations
Revisit chromium scandal and the DEP scientist whistleblower
New Jersey PEER is a state chapter of a national alliance of state and federal agency resource professionals working to ensure environmental ethics and government accountability.